I took delivery in Novemebr 2017. Love the triple weather covering and the driver was great in placing them. But...

Avoid these pellets this year. I’ve been burning pellets in a Harman P61 for almost 20 years. I typically burn softwood pellets and used to order Cleanfire pellets years ago. Their quality dropped so I went with other suppliers. Thought I would try Cleanfire Pacific pellets again this year. Huge mistake. Lots of heavy black granular ash in the burn pot. The pellets came from three different pallets. Each pallet is burning bad. If I do not rake the burn pot every 4 hours I get a burn pot full of heavy ash and a lazy dirty flame making a sticky sooty mess of the stove. I also have American Wood Fibers softwood. Love them. I can go 16-18 hours before needing to rake the burn pot. And even then the ash is gray and light, not clogging the burn pot. I can go 12-14 hours burning Spruce Pointe softwood before needing the rake the burn pot. Again a gray light ash. I even ran to the local HD that had Fireside Ultra’s and picked up a few test bags. They burn way better than the Cleanfire. They burned like a hard/soft blend, which they are supposed to be. I could go 8-12 hours before raking the burn pot and the ash was light. They were surprisingly very respectable. I took a gamble and purchased the Cleanfire Pacific and lost. I don't mind paying a bit more for quality. Can't stand bad pellets. But this year I paid for quality and got trash.

These really burn like Green Supremes and their re branded brothers – bottom of the barrel. They don’t look like Green Supremes, just burn like them. Lots of heavy black ash. Stay away.

I've been using this brand of pellets almost exclusively for the last 6 years. Now I don't use them in a stove. I use a wood pellet fired boiler. The last one was a Baxi 1.5, which recently died, and now a Froling P4 -8/15. Both from Tarm Biomass in Orford NH, formerly in Lyme NH. These pellets come very well packaged, never had any bad bags. I get them through woodpellets.com which is an extremely reliable place to get your pellets. Their home delivery folks are the best I've seen in 50 years of having stuff delivered to the house. Price varies from $250 - 260 per ton depending on the time of year. They provide very good heat, very small amounts of ash per bag and don't make a mess on the chimney (had a sweep who really didn't want to charge me for a cleaning when there was nothing to clean).

Cleanfire pellets are just the worst pellets I have used over the seven years that I have used pellets.The first year three years ago seemed Ok,so I decided I try them again.The second year was just terrible,very excessive ash and black soot
all over the wall where the flue exited.I complained to woodpellets .com and the assured me that the situation with the pellets was corrected.this last year,the third year I used these pellets is just terrible.Not only did they not deliver the pellets at the time they promised,they delivered pallets contaminated with water and the ash content has not improved at all.I am thoroughly dissatified
with cleanfire pellets and not recommend them to anyone. and for the record this site won't let me submit this review.

These pellets were advertised as high BTU, low ash. I'd have to say I'm fairly disappointed so far with the heat output. While these are very clean with little fines and dust in the bag, the heat output just isn't there for the premium price paid. I'll be going back to standard hardwood pellets next year. Burning these in an Enviro M55.

This is a review for the CleanFire Hardwood Blend (not the Fir Blend).
I have been using these pellets for the first time this year. I have been burning for almost 3 months. Last year I used a different pellet which gives me a good basis or benchmark for comparison. I have found a significant increase of ash outside my house from these pellets and the ash/soot seems much blacker than the pellets I used last year. Further, and more significant how these pellets form a rigid wafer of ash in the fire box of my pellet stove. I have to open it every day on cold days at least once and scrape out the hard ash wafer and build up. It is easy to detect because the flames no longer shoot straight up in a robust manner. They are diffused and swirl around more because the air flow is disrupted by the ash wafer/buildup in the fire box. Surely this is a reduction in efficiency.
The pellets I used last year did not EVER do this. I seem to be using about the same amount (burn rate) or more this year. These may or may not burn hotter (impossible to definitively determine without testing equipment. Even if they do burn hotter, the mess is not worth it. Opening the door of the stove so often to clean the ash wafer just increased the ash dust and mess in my home and leaves a more obvious eye sore outside where it vents out. One final observation is the ashes with this pellet seem to cling much more to the sides of the fire box and walls of my stove, increasing the maintenance/cleaning.
I bought 5 tons for the winter and will be fine with these but I recommend a different pellet. The one I used last year happens to be a softwood or mix if I recall. I will go back to those.

I have a Enviro M55 and a Enviro Mini burning in our old farmhouse. I have been burning wood pellets for many years and have tried several brands. Without a doubt, these are the lowest quality pellet that I have ever purchased. The heat output is considerably low and the ash is high. I have been very disappointed especially since I paid good money for a quality pellet. We have 10 tons of these pellets in our shed and I cannot wait until they are gone. Next season I'm taking no risk and am buying Okinagan Douglas Fir.

I have a quadra fire mt vernon ae .For 5 years i have burned cleanfire hardwood . 5 years ago they were fantastic but now probably the lowest quality pellets. They're full of fines and a very dusty product.